Abstract
Accurate forecasting of sediment accumulation under extreme hydrodynamic forcing is essential for coastal engineering design and harbor management. This study evaluates the performance of Dynamic Mode Decomposition (DMD), optimized DMD (optDMD), and optimized DMD with stability constraints (optDMDs) for reconstructing and forecasting sediment accumulation height fields at the Dilderesi River mouth under a 50-year return period flood scenario. Sediment height fields generated using Delft3D are represented through reduced-order modal decompositions and the truncation rank is determined based on reconstruction-error analysis. Although all formulations reproduce the training data with negligible error, their predictive behavior differs during temporal extrapolation. Standard DMD exhibits rapid error growth at longer lead times. The optDMD formulation improves short- and intermediate-horizon performance but shows gradual degradation at extended lead times. Optimized DMD with stability constraints provides the most consistent long-horizon forecasts, maintaining high Nash–Sutcliffe efficiency and low RMSE across the full 9 h prediction interval. Examination of the continuous-time eigenvalue distributions and modal dynamics indicates that spectral characteristics of the reduced-order representation govern forecast robustness. The results demonstrate that enforcing spectral stability within reduced-order frameworks substantially enhances morphodynamic forecasting reliability under extreme flood conditions. The proposed approach provides a computationally efficient and physically consistent tool for sediment dynamics prediction in coastal engineering applications.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 1087 |
| Journal | Water (Switzerland) |
| Volume | 18 |
| Issue number | 9 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - May 2026 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2026 by the authors.
Keywords
- data-driven coastal modeling
- Delft3D
- modal analysis
- optimized Dynamic Mode Decomposition (optDMD)
- sediment morphodynamics
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